Income Tax Department To Scrutinise All Cash Deposits Between April 1 And November 9

Express News Global

Press Trust of India | Updated: January 08, 2017 15:25 IST

Income Tax Department is planning to scrutinize transactions made in the months leading up to notes ban

HIGHLIGHTS

Income Tax department to examine transactions in months before notes ban

Ones to not submit PAN, Form 60 while opening account to do so by Feb 28

Tax department is analysing bank deposit trends post-notes ban

NEW DELHI: The Income Tax Department has asked banks to submit details of cash deposits in savings accounts between April 1 and November 9, 2016. The I-T department is planning to scrutinise banking transactions in the months leading up to the government’s demonetisation move.

Besides this, banks have also been directed to ask the account holders, who did not furnished PAN (Permanent Account Number) or Form 60 (for those without PAN) at the time of opening bank account, to do so by February 28 this year.

According to the notification, the banks, cooperative banks and post offices will have to report all cash deposits between April 1 to November 9, 2016 to the tax department.

Further bank officials will have to document PAN or declaration of Form 60 received from account holders and maintain all records for transactions under Rule 114B of I-T Act. Rule 114B lists various transactions for which quoting PAN is mandatory.

It said that persons who have not quoted PAN, or did not furnish Form 60 at the time of opening account, will have to provide the same by February 28. Form 60 is a declaration form filed by an individual without PAN.

Following the demonetisation move effective November 9, the tax department had earlier asked banks and post offices to report all deposits above Rs. 2.5 lakh in savings accounts and more than Rs. 12.50 lakh in current accounts made between November 10 and December 30, 2016. They also asked to be informed of any cash deposits exceeding Rs. 50,000 in a single day.

With an estimated Rs. 15 lakh crore in scrapped currency notes been returned to banks since the announcement regarding demonetisation, the tax department has started analysing the trends in bank deposits.